Information and Surveillance Systems for Refugee Populations Gilbert Burnham, MD, PhD Johns Hopkins University.

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Transcript Information and Surveillance Systems for Refugee Populations Gilbert Burnham, MD, PhD Johns Hopkins University.

Information
and Surveillance Systems
for Refugee Populations
Gilbert Burnham, MD, PhD
Johns Hopkins University
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Section A
The Need for Information
and Data Collection
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Definition of Surveillance
Surveillance is the ongoing, systematic
collection, analysis, and interpretation of
health data, essential to the planning,
implementation, and evaluation of public
health practice
It includes timely dissemination of data to
those who need to know
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Information in
Humanitarian Emergencies
Information is the backbone of all public
health activities
– Monitoring health services
– Control of disease outbreaks
– Program evaluation
Although importance is recognized at one
level, data collection is often done poorly
in the field, although improving
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Information May Be Simple
Very basic information needed
–Numerators—E.g., who’s affected or
vulnerable, who’s experienced illness, etc.
–Denominators—E.g., population size,
population risk, vulnerable population,
target group
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Information May Be Simple
Goal is not to understand full picture
– But to have enough data to plan and
implement emergency response
– Initial information can be updated
regularly from many sources
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Phases in Information Needs
Information needs differ for each phase of
the emergency in terms of . . .
– Type of data needed for decisions
– Amount of information required
– Frequency of collecting data
– Methods of data collection
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Methods of Data Collection
Rapid assessments
– Initially to establish baseline data
Surveillance—Ongoing data collection
– Health facility
– Sentinel
– Community health workers
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Methods of Data Collection
Intermittent population-based surveys
– E.g., nutritional status, KPC
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Phases in Data Collection
Pre-Emergency
Phase
Pre-flight information on health
status
Rapid assessment surveys
Establish a surveillance system
Emergency Phase Rapid assessment surveys
Baseline data
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Phases in Data Collection
PostEmergency
Phase
Targeted population surveys or
sampling
Consolidate surveillance
Maintenance
Phase
Regular population-based surveys
Continue surveillance
Modify disease list
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Phases in Data Collection
Emergency
Phase
Post-Emergency
Phase
Duration
1–4 months
1 month–indefinite
Collection of
Data
Method
Mostly active
Largely qualitative
Passive and active
More quantitative
Qualitative
Mostly quantitative
Case
Definitions
Few
Simple
More
+/- case definitions
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Rapid Assessment
The initial rapid assessment
– Begins when displaced persons arrive
– Forms the basis of the surveillance
system
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Rapid Assessment
Team members have health care and
epidemiological skills
Collect background information
– Maps, demographic/health data
Require support personnel
– Translators, data collectors, transport
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Emergency Phase:
Initial Information Needed
Depends on decisions to be made
– Demographic
– Mortality
– Morbidity
– Nutritional status
– Program monitoring
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Emergency Phase:
Initial Information Needed
Background information
Circumstances surrounding the flight
Host/home country disease patterns
– Host country treatment protocols and
antibiotic resistance
Usual level of health care received
Social structure
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Emergency Phase:
Initial Information Needed
Environmental conditions
– Climate and geography
– Shelter and sanitation
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Emergency Phase:
Initial Information Needed
Resources available to host country
– Among the refugees themselves
– Within host country (emergency food and
drug supplies, health personnel, health
care capacity)
Host country information system
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Approach to Initial Assessment
Quick survey for serious problems
– May need convenience sampling
– Gather as accurate data as possible
Detailed survey if less urgent
– Can use various sampling techniques
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Demographic Information
Critical denominator—total population
Population structure
– Age distribution
– Number of males and females
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Demographic Information
Vulnerable groups
– Unaccompanied minors
– Female-headed households
Rate of new arrivals and departures
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Section B
Population Size and Sampling
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Problems in Estimating
Population Size
Estimating population size difficult
– Increasing situations where counting is
not allowed
– General lack of information
– Lack of confidence in results
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Problems in Estimating
Population Size
Many reasons not to have numbers
Results may be manipulated
– By refugees
– Agency
– Or host country
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Direct Estimation of
Population Size
1 Count number of arrivals
2 Aerial photographs
3 Calculate with GPS
4 Count total number of dwellings
5 Random sampling of households
6 Indirect methods
7 Full registration
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Count New Arrivals
Count the number of people entering an area
(bridge, road, or buses)
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Aerial Photographs
On-the-ground sampling at same time as
over-flight
Check for empty huts, moving population
Refugee population must be distinct from
local population
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Calculate with GPS
Calculate the circumference of a settled area
with GPS
Estimate household densities within area
Carry out a household census on selected
samples
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Calculate with GPS
For a small
settlement, estimate
the mean household
occupancy and
composition
In a sub-sample,
calculate the
household size
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Random Sampling of Households
To estimate the number of households
– Draw a map, estimate size
– Draw grids to create sections
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Random Sampling of Households
Count the number of households in a
proportion of the sections
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Random Sampling of Households
Calculate mean household census and
composition for a sample
Can use a more formal cluster sampling
approach
– Where population is self-settled and lack
registration
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Full Registration
Registration process for refugees
– Collect demographic data
– Issue registration cards
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Full Registration
Takes months to organize/conduct
Subject to multiple registrations
– Follow up sample of registrations to
determine percent invalid
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Indirect Estimation of
Population Size
Count the number of children under five
years (or less than 110 cm)
– They average 15–20% of total population
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Indirect Estimation of
Population Size
Use number of immunizations given
– Calculate coverage rates
– Estimate total-under-five population
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Section C
Indicators
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Emergency Phase:
Mortality Indicators
Mortality can be reported as . . .
– Crude mortality rate (CMR)
– Age and sex-specific mortality rate
(particularly for children)
– Cause-specific mortality rate
– Case fatality rate (CFR)
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Crude Mortality Rate
CMR of 1/10,000 persons/day delineates the
phases of emergency
Calculated as
– Deaths/10,000 persons/day during acute
phase
– Deaths/1,000 persons/month during postemergency phase
Consider age-specific and gender-specific
mortality rates
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Emergency Phase:
Morbidity Indicators
Incidence rates (attack rates)
Age and sex-specific incidence rates for
primary causes of disease
– Especially among children
Cause-specific morbidity rates
– Case definition critical
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Emergency Phase:
Morbidity Indicators
Reporting initially very simple
– Morbidity register in Goma, 1994, started
with three diseases
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Post-Emergency:
Health Information System
Morbidity and mortality indicators
Disease-specific surveillance
Nutritional surveillance
Environmental health indicators
Program monitoring indicators
Reproductive health indicators
Violence/human rights abuse indicators
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Morbidity Indicators
Primary diagnosis
Age-specific incidence rates
Sex-specific incidence rates
Relation to season
Changes in CFR (cholera CFR)
Reportable diseases
Violence/human rights abuse indicators
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Disease-Specific Surveillance
Priority diseases
– Measles, malaria, ARI, diarrhoea,
meningitis
– Monitor for antibiotic resistance
Other diseases
– STI, TB
Location-specific disease outbreaks
– Sleeping sickness
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Nutritional Surveillance
Periodic assessment of under-fives
– Commonly use WFH or MUAC
Acute malnutrition reported as:
– Moderate if
> -2Z (<80% WFH)
– Severe if
>-3Z (<70% WFH)
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Nutritional Surveillance
Stunting—Indicates long-term problem
Weight gain patterns at under-five clinic
Screening for micronutrient deficiency
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Food Security Indicators
Per capita food distribution
Number receiving supplementary feeding
Food basket content
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Food Security Indicators
Household food reserves
Market prices
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Environmental Health Indicators
Water supply
– Quality
– Quantity available
– Individual consumption
– Distance it is carried
Sanitation
– Latrines—ratio to population, usage
– Solid waste disposal
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Program Monitoring Indicators
Health facility access indicator
– U-5 children seen
– Antenatal clinic attendance, TT doses
given, FP services
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Program Monitoring Indicators
EPI coverage and drop-out rates
(DPT1–DPT3)
Health worker performance—quality
indicators
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Section D
Establishing a
Surveillance System
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Objectives of Surveillance
System
1 Determine what resources are needed
2 Determine what health status is
3 Set program priorities
4 Detect and monitor outbreaks
5 Assess effectiveness of programs
6 Determine quality of services
7 Allow donors to anticipate particular needs
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Establishing a
Surveillance System
1 Build initial assessment data
2 Train from people to collect/analyze/use data
– One person responsible for directing
3 Define the information to be collected
– Only that which will be acted upon
4 Design quality checks for information
5 Identify program objectives—coverage, KAP,
access to services
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Establishing a
Surveillance System
6 Establish case definitions for common
diseases
7 Develop and test surveillance forms
8 List data sources for each indicator
9 Establish data analysis and reporting
procedures
10 Review function of the surveillance system
periodically
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Establish Standard
Case Definitions
Develop case definitions for . . .
Diarrhea
ARI
Measles
Dysentery
Malaria
Meningitis
Cholera
Hepatitis
STIs
Micronutrient
deficiencies
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Examples of Case
Definitions
Malaria
Measles
Watery
diarrhea
LRTI
Fever and periodic shaking, chills
Fever, cough, rash, conjunctivitis
More than three watery stools per
day, but no blood or rice-water in
stools
Fever, cough, rapid breathing
(more than 50 breaths per minute)
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Surveillance Forms
Develop simple, standardized forms . . .
– Total adult, under-fives, male, female
– Weekly mortality forms
– Weekly morbidity forms
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Example of Simple Morbidity Form
Cause
0–4 yrs
Male
0–4 yrs
Female
5+ yrs
Male
5+ yrs
Female
TOTAL
ARI
Diarrhea
Malaria
Malnutrition
Measles
Other
Repeat Cases
TOTAL
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Sources of Information
Health facilities
– OPD
– Under-five clinics
Community
Population surveys
– Periodic—e.g., during an outbreak
Grave sites
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Data Analysis
Don’t collect data for the sake of it
– Examine and interpret it to make
appropriate and timely changes
Establish data analysis procedures
Train staff to do simple analysis
– Calculate rates, draw tables, compare to
previous season
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Data Reporting
Determine frequency of reporting
– Daily during epidemic
– Less frequently in post-emergency
Determine information flow and feedback
process
– Epidemiologic bulletin or meetings
– Encourage informal feedback
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Dissemination of Data
Who gets?
– Health coordinators
– Host country health system
– Refugee leadership
Who follows up?
Who documents?
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Evaluation of
Surveillance System
Periodically review the information system
function
– % deaths reported as “unknown”
– % morbidity reported as “other”
– Assess use of case definitions
– Compare diagnosis to treatment
– Use of information for decision making
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